Slovenia: NPP Krsko exceeds...

In September 2025, the Krsko nuclear power plant, jointly owned by Slovenia and...

Romania: Electrica completes 27...

Romanian electricity distributor and supplier Electrica has completed the construction of the Satu...

Romania: NEPI Rockcastle launches...

NEPI Rockcastle, the largest owner and operator of shopping centers in Central and...

Bulgaria: Bulgargaz secures LNG...

Bulgaria’s state-owned natural gas supplier Bulgargaz has completed a tender to meet part...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeNews Serbia EnergySerbia, Country will...

Serbia, Country will be able to store between 300 and 500 million cubic meters of gas in gas storages in Hungary

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said after the meeting with Hungarian Prime Minister ViktorOrban that Serbia will be able to store between 300 and 500 million cubic meters of gas in gas storages in Hungary, because Serbia has insufficient storage capacities.

President Vucic said that, at the moment, there are 162 million cubic meters of gas in Serbian part of Banatski Dvor storage, and another 123 million cubic meters in the Russian part. The withdrawal rate is five million cubic meters of gas per day, which is not enough during the winter, because Serbia’s daily consumption is around 15 million cubic meters. So it is important to utilize additional storage capacities in Hungary, said President Vucic, adding that Serbia plans to build another gas storage facility in Srpski Itebej.

Serbian authorities fear that the country will be left without gas supply in Europe decides to completely ban Russian gas imports or if Russia cuts the supply to Europe.

Earlier in May, President Vucic said earlier that negotiations on the new natural gas supply deal with Russian Gazprom will start after 10 May, adding that Serbia is 100 % dependent on Russian gas and 60 % on Russian oil.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Serbia as a re-export hub: Europe’s gateway to third markets

In an increasingly globalized supply chain environment, Serbia is emerging not only as an engineering and manufacturing base but as a strategic re-export hub for EU companies aiming to access third markets. By combining favorable trade agreements, geographic positioning, and a...

From Čačak to Europe: Nearshoring shared business services with regional talent and real connectivity

Čačak sits in the heart of Serbia with an asset mix that plays perfectly to near-sourcing: a deep regional talent catchment, motorways that cut transit times to major hubs, and operating costs that let you scale shared business services...

The new currency of trust: Where technical risk meets financial consequence

In modern infrastructure, oversight isn’t a paperwork ritual—it’s a translation exercise. Design choices, test results, and schedule slips must be converted into hard numbers a credit committee can act on. That alignment of technical risk with financial consequence has...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!